
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Game Informer : Xbox 360 at 54.2 percent failure rate
Unfortunately, for having the highest failure rate, survey participants also pinned Microsoft for having the least helpful customer service representatives. Not that it matters – later in the survey, only 3.8 percent of participants said they'd never buy another Xbox 360 due to its high failure rate.
Speaking of which, we're not sure what future techno-utopia this poll was conducted in, but a 54.2 percent Xbox 360 failure rate sounds awfully low. Had the survey's participants been comprised entirely of Joystiq staffers, it would have been a bone-chilling 100 percent
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Free Tools to Back Up Your Online Accounts
Next time your favorite web site is down or you're locked out of an account, make sure you've got the crucial info you need where you can get to it: on your computer.
"But I don't need backup if my data's in the cloud," you say. "Big companies with lots of servers are better at backup than little old me could ever be." That's true, but cloud computing does come with risks. Depending on an external service to host, update, and maintain the software you love and the data you need is both the cloud's advantage and disadvantage: you're putting your stuff on computers you don't control at a single point of access (or failure). Companies get shut down or bought, accounts get locked up, servers (and you) go offline. If you store your email, photos, documents, contacts, bookmarks, and journal entries in the cloud, there are easy ways to back up all that information from popular online services to your computer. You know, just in case.
Back Up Your Gmail
Command line geeks who want to automate the process, see how to back up Gmail with fetchmail. Otherwise, you can fire up a desktop email client (like Thunderbird, which stores your mail in standard mbox files) and simply download your messages every month or so. Alternately, check out the previously-mentioned Gmail Backup utility. If you're willing to fork over a few bucks a month, BackupMyMail supports Gmail, Yahoo, and Hotmail accounts and also offers a free trial.
Back Up Your Flickr Account
Back Up Your Google Docs
Back Up Your Twitter Account
Command line lovers can use this clever method to download their tweet XML via cURL. Alternately, web application Backup My Tweets does just that and lets you download your tweets in HTML, PDF, or JSON format, with a gotcha: you have to tweet about Backup My Tweets in order to use the free trial. We posted about tweet backup solutionTweetake, which outputs your tweets in a CSV file, but be warned: Tweetake requires you enter your Twitter username and password on their site, which isn't the most secure option the Twitter API offers. (Don't enter your Twitter password anywhere other than Twitter.com itself; if you do to use a Twitter-related service, change it immediately afterward.) For more Twitter archiving options, check out the social media experts' picks over at ReadWriteWeb.
Back Up Your Facebook Account
Back Up Your Blog (Tumblr, WordPress, and Others)
Tumblr users should check out this handy tumble-log backup utility, which sucked in and spit out 272 of my tumblelog's posts in a flash. Folks hosting their own WordPress installation should check out the WP-DB-Backup plug-in, which emails you or saves regular backups of your blog's database. I personally have restored my blog using output from this plug-in, but my fellow editor The How-To Geek had a bad experience with the plug-in. He recommends backing up your web server with rsync and a regular mysqldump command.
If your blog is hosted at Blogger or another service, you can use a web site copying utility to spider its pages and save them as HTML to your computer. For more on how to do that on the Mac or PC, see the previously posted Ask Lifehacker: How Do I Back Up My Blog?.
You can also mirror an entire web site to your hard drive using the hackable command line tool wget. Similarly, a well-formed cURL command can back up your Delicious bookmarks.